Paris, Texture, and the Power of Black & White
A visit to the Pompidou and an Ellsworth Kelly painting sparked a shift in my practice—leading to a bold new series of textured black and white abstractions.
Vermont, 6ft x 6ft, Black & White, 2024
In the quiet halls of the Pompidou Center in Paris, I came across a large painting by Ellsworth Kelly titled Black & White. It was deceptively simple—two contrasting forms in stark opposition—yet it held me in place. There was a silence to it. A tension. A clarity I hadn’t realized I was craving.
I returned to my studio in Phoenix with that image still imprinted in my mind. Something had shifted. I began to look at my older, highly textured 6ft x 6ft color paintings differently. They were full of movement and energy, but suddenly I felt drawn to pare things down. Not to erase complexity, but to focus it. I began repurposing those canvases into something new.
What followed was a series of large-scale black and white works—geometric, deliberate, and deeply rooted in texture. The acrylic paint moved across ridges and grooves already present on the surface, revealing an unexpected depth. Stripping away color allowed the materiality to speak more clearly. Every shadow, every angle of light mattered.
These paintings are not minimal. They’re meditative. Each one is an exploration of contrast—dark and light, precision and imperfection, control and surrender. They echo something I felt standing in front of Kelly’s piece: that black and white can hold as much feeling as a spectrum of color, if not more.
This collection continues to grow. It reminds me that reduction isn’t absence—it’s clarity. And sometimes, returning from a city full of color and noise, what we seek is the rhythm between opposites, and the quiet power of restraint.presence. For attention to the unseen. Like the art it stands beside, it doesn’t demand to be decoded. It simply invites you to enter the space it holds.
This new body of work has become a conversation between structure and intuition, history and present, simplicity and depth.
You can view the full Black and White Collection here ›.